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'Far from normal': Expert flags 'deeply concerning' potential motive for Trump settlement

ABC recently agreed to pay $15 million to resolve a defamation suit brought by Donald Trump, prompting one legal expert to raise a red flag.

Joyce Vance, a former federal prosecutor and legal analyst, weighed in on Sunday about what she called the "surprise Saturday night move" by ABC and anchor George Stephanopoulos.

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Trump lawyer Alina Habba gets legal fact check after dropping 'bombshell' news report

Alina Habba got hit with a fact check from a legal expert on Sunday after the Donald Trump attorney dropped a "bombshell."

Habba, who made some headlines during Trump's civil defamation trial and said in October that court rulings against Trump aren't from "real judges," was recently announced to be Trump's planned "Counselor to the President" in the upcoming term.

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'This dude is dirty': Lindsey Graham hit with MAGA fury for 'contradicting' Trump

U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham is experiencing heat from the MAGA wing of the Republican party after publicly contradicting Donald Trump.

Graham said in an interview that he didn't believe government officials who investigated Trump's connections to the events of Jan. 6 while he was still in office the first time, such as Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger, deserved prison time.

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'Lol, ok': Trump hiring man said to have 'sued a cow' leads to internet ridicule

Donald Trump's critics laughed at the president-elect's announcement on Saturday.

Trump took to Truth Social over the weekend, where he announced a role in his upcoming administration for the CEO of the social media platform.

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Trump said to have triggered the moment we could 'see his own supporters turn against him'

Donald Trump may see some backlash from his own supporters, according to a political analyst.

Alexi McCammond, who serves as an opinion editor for the Washington Post and has previously commented on Trump's relationship to the MAGA base, appeared on MSNBC on Saturday.

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Reporter spills about Trump team's 'clever strategy' to get controversial pick confirmed

Donald Trump's team is using behind-the-scenes moves to win over senators in hopes that they will confirm his controversial nominee to lead the FBI, according to a reporter.

Trump signaled his intention to appoint Kash Patel as the director of FBI, leading to outrage among critics who say he's too focused on being a loyalist.

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'You have to be kidding': MAGA melts down as Spelling Bee accepts new word

The Scripps National Spelling Bee’s annual list of study words for third graders drew the ire of conservatives fuming over its embrace of the feminist variation for “women.”

The 2024-25 study list posted on school district websites includes the term “womyn” as an approved option for spelling “women” that third graders who want to compete in the national spelling competition can use, Fox News Digital reported.

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'Pay up and pray': Fury from all sides hits tech billionaires after $1M gifts to Trump

A number of tech billionaires — including many who have not previously backed Trump — are beginning to open their pocketbooks for President-elect Donald Trump, contributing large amounts of money to his inaugural fund. Among them are Amazon's Jeff Bezos, OpenAI's Sam Altman, and Meta's Mark Zuckerberg.

Their donations triggered a furious reaction from many commenters on social media.

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'Shove it!' Steve Bannon unleashes profane attack on billionaires cutting checks for Trump

Far-right Donald Trump ally Steve Bannon laid into tech billionaires who are donating money to Trump's inaugural fund on his "War Room" podcast Friday — accusing them of being fair-weather friends who are only trying to suck up to Trump because they weren't able to defeat him in the election.

Bannon's rant came at the tail end of fantasizing that following the most recent election, "the Democratic Party can go away. We can actually end it. We can drive a stake in the heart of the beast. You can do it." And the way Republicans can do it, he argued, is "Populist policies, nationalist policies, economic, to bring jobs back."

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'Bitter disappointment': Conservative warns Trump pick to step aside or become 'scapegoat'

In a column for the Washington Post, a senior political correspondent for the National Review suggested one of Donald Trump's Cabinet nominees might want to withdraw their name because the position isn't worth the peril to their reputation.

According to conservative journalist Jim Geraghty, the position of Director of National Intelligence (DNI) is low-reward and high-risk for whoever takes it, as history has proved.

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Nancy Pelosi hospitalized following injury in Europe

Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) was hospitalized while traveling abroad with other lawmakers, her office said.

The 84-year-old former House speaker was part of bipartisan congressional delegation in Luxembourg to mark the 80th anniversary of the Battle of the Bulge when she sustained an unspecified injury during an official engagement and was admitted to a nearby hospital for evaluation, reported ABC News.

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'Stay vigilant': Ex-FBI profiler warns to expect CEO shooting copycats

A former FBI profiler warned that copycat killers may be motivated to act after the reaction to the assassination of a health care executive.

United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson was gunned down last week in Midtown Manhattan, and many social media users justified — or even lauded — the killing. Suspect Luigi Mangione has been celebrated as something like a folk hero, and a pair of experts appeared on CNN to analyze the public reaction.

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'Ontario is not having it': Trump reportedly set stage for Canada to cut off U.S. energy

With MSNBC host Jonathan Lemire pointing out that Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has been surprisingly sanguine about Donald Trump's insults and tariff threats, CNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin claimed the president-elect's taunts are not going unnoticed north of the U.S. border.

With Trump wielding tariff threats against Canada, Mexico and China before he even takes office, the "Squawk Box" host reported that there is the danger that some Americans could end up scrambling to keep the lights on if Canada's leaders choose to cut off power supplies to the U.S. provided by their country.

"Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau, at least to this point, has not really fought back against Trump's taunting, whether about tariffs or the suggestion he would annex Canada and be our 51st state, calling him Governor Trudeau in a social media post," Lemire prompted his guest. "But all eyes turns to the province of Ontario and Doug Ford which is floating the idea they're going to hit back, they may bar American-made alcohol and other restrictions if Trump follows through on these tariffs threats."

ALSO READ: The reckoning: Plenty of hurts coming for the people who didn't care about their country

"Ontario is not having it," Ross Sorkin bluntly replied. "And they're throwing down the gauntlet on the alcohol front because it would make the export of alcohol from the U.S. complicated and much more expensive.":

"But more importantly there's this electricity piece," he continued. "Ontario delivers electricity to about 1.5 million homes in the United States and suggesting maybe they would consider cutting that off."

"You know, this is when people talk about the tariffs and the uncertainty the tariffs could create, it's –– it wasn't just the cost of the tariffs, it's the retaliation," he elaborated, "and this is an example of the kind of thing that could happen and, therefore, a kind of different leverage points you think either the U.S. has or, in this case, Canada, may have."

You can watch below or at the link here.

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